VARTAN GREGORIAN TO JOIN THE HUNTER
FOUNDATION ("THF") BOARD AS £ 100M COMMITMENT
CONFIRMED
Vartan Gregorian, president of Carnegie Corporation of New
York, the grant-making institution founded by Andrew Carnegie
in 1911 is to join The Hunter Foundation board, the venture
philanthropy set up by Tom and Marion Hunter in Scotland.
His involvement in philanthropy is extensive having served
on the boards of the J. Paul Getty Trust, the Aga Khan University,
and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Currently Gregorian
serves on the boards of the Institute for Advanced Study at
Princeton, Human Rights Watch and the Museum of Modern Art.
Commenting on his appointment THF chairman, Tom Hunter noted;
"Vartan is probably one of the most influential thinkers
of this era in relation to philanthropy and the impact of
education. His appointment will enable our Trustees, and I
believe Scotland, to benefit from an incredible network of
contacts, programmes and leading edge thinking that we can
apply for the common good here in Scotland.
"His appointment marks a major milestone in the development
of THF as we seek to build a venture philanthropy that aims
to make a sustained impact upon Scotland and indeed perhaps
beyond."
Vartan Gregorian, who recently chaired the panel to select
the design for the World Trade Centre Memorial, commented;
"Like his fellow Scotsman Andrew Carnegie, Tom Hunter
believes that private wealth should be used as a force for
the public good. I look forward to working with Tom and his
wife as they strengthen their philanthropic commitment and
create a vision for a foundation that will be a force for
this century in Scotland and elsewhere."
Hunter and Gregorian met initially after Hunter had sold his
first business, Sports Division and was analysing the most
effective means of establishing a venture philanthropy in
Scotland. The relationship has continued with Gregorian on
an ongoing basis.
The Hunter Foundation also today confirmed that its founder
and chairman, Tom Hunter had committed £ 100 million
to support the ongoing development of the venture philanthropy’s
programmes.
The funds will be drawn down as and when necessary based upon
the decisions of THF Trustees and will be applied to education
and enterprise programmes that are capable of being scaled
for national impact.
For further information please contact Ewan Hunter on 07803
904769.
Notes to Editors:
Vartan Gregorian: for more information on Vartan Gregorian
please visit www.carnegie.org
Additional key CV data:
Prior to his current position, which he assumed in June 1997,
Gregorian served for nine years as the sixteenth president
of Brown University. For eight years (1981-1989), Gregorian
served as a president of the New York Public Library, an institution
with a network of four research libraries and eighty-three
circulating libraries.
Gregorian is the author of Emergence of Modern Afghanistan,
1880-1946, Islam: A Mosaic Not a Monolith, and his autobiography
The Road to Home. A Phi Beta Kappa and a Ford Foundation Foreign
Area Training Fellow, he is a recipient of numerous fellowships,
including those from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation,
the American Council of Learned Societies, the Social Science
Research Council and the American Philosophical Society. He
is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts of Sciences, and
the American Philosophical Society. In 1969, he received the
Danforth Foundation's E.H. Harbison Distinguished Teaching
Award.
His numerous civic and academic honors include some fifty
honorary degrees, including those from Brown, Dartmouth, Drew,
Johns Hopkins, University of Pennsylvania, the Jewish Theological
Seminary, the City University of New York, Rutgers, Tufts,
New York University, University of Aberdeen, and, most recently,
The Juilliard School, and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
In 1986, Gregorian was awarded the Ellis Island Medal of
Honor and in 1989 the American Academy of the Institute of
Arts and Letters' Gold Medal for Service to the Arts. In 1998,
President Clinton awarded him the National Humanities Medal.
The Hunter Foundation (THF)
THF was formed in 1998, known then as the TBH Charitable
Trust, changing its name last year to THF. The venture philanthropy
was formed with initial capital of £ 10m from retail
entrepreneur, Tom Hunter and his wife Marion.
Subsequently THF has invested some £ 13.5m to date
into national enterprise and educational programmes aimed
at offering 'opportunity for all'. Its Board of Trustees include
Tom and Marion Hunter, Jim McMahon and corporate lawyer, Robert
Glennie. THF is run by chief executive, Ewan Hunter (no relation
to Tom and Marion). For further information please go to www.westcoastcapital.co.uk